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A practical and
thought-provoking workshop explaining techniques for planning
and controlling projects using Microsoft Project EPM. Detailed working concepts of the system
are explored to help plan and control people, tasks and time in
an enterprise environment. Pre-defined or customer-specific
exercises test skills and abilities and relate them to practical
project environments. |
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Microsoft
Project 2007/2003/2002 users who will be planning projects
and utilising resources within an Enterprise
Project Management (EPM) environment. |
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Project preliminaries
This first module is all
about getting started with Microsoft Project. You will
learn about toolbars and menus, task panes and help. The
various ways that data can be viewed are also introduced,
together with an explanation about the types of data that can be
managed. |
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The Microsoft Project
user environment
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Communicating with
Microsoft Project
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How to create
projects
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The building blocks
of a project
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How to view the
project's data
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Configuring the EPM
environment
The second module
introduces the EPM environment and how this can be established
and configured. You will learn how roles and permissions
control what people can see and what they can do. You will
create and manage fields that apply to all projects within the
enterprise. To define people within the enterprise, you
will import existing resource information and then configure it
for the needs of all projects. Finally, you will see how
projects and tasks are managed in an enterprise environment,
together with the calendars that control what can happen when.
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EPM overview
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Roles and permissions
overview
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Managing enterprise
fields
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Managing enterprise
components
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Importing resources
into the enterprise
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Opening the
enterprise resource pool
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Detailed resource
definition
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Opening and saving
projects
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Importing projects
into the enterprise
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Defining tasks within
the enterprise
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Calendars within the
enterprise
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Planning the work
This module is all about
creating and defining the tasks within a project. You will
learn how to create, organize and manage a project's outline.
You will then define a duration for each task as your best
estimate of how long that task will take to complete.
Further task definition will be achieved by using task notes and
creating hyperlinks. You will learn how to create links
between tasks that will determine the schedule of a project.
Finally, you will learn various ways that the project's schedule
can be viewed and interpreted. |
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Defining a project's
outline
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Refining an outline
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Defining individual
tasks
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Tasks and durations
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Creating links
between tasks
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Tasks and the network
diagram
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Reviewing the task
outline
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Reviewing the
sequence of tasks
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Reviewing the schedule
This module concentrates
on reviewing the schedule of a project. As a project
usually has a critical path, you will learn how to emphasize
this and also how to indicate slack both graphically and as a
value. You will also learn how Microsoft Project can
produce information in printed form, together with the wide
variety of options on how a printed view can be configured.
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Modifying the look of
tables
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Formatting the look
of text
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Displaying a critical
path
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Timescale formatting
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Page setup options
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Setting print
parameters
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Assigning resources in
an enterprise environment
This module explains how
resources are defined and assigned to perform tasks within an
enterprise environment. Local project resources and
resources within an Enterprise Resource Pool are created and
configured. Skills are applied to resources and project
teams are built to effectively use the skills available.
Team members are assigned to tasks relative to the skills and
availability that they possess. As assignments are
controlled by task types and whether a task is effort driven or
not, you will learn how to establish these important parameters
and understand the implications that they can have. You
will also learn about the impact that assignments can have upon
the project's schedule as it now becomes a much more accurate
representation of what should happen and when. |
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Creating local
resources
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Creating skill-based
assignments
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Setting up Team
Builder
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Creating a project
team
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Single person
assignments
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Multiple assignments
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Assigning work around
availability
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Using materials and
money
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Using task types
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Using effort driven
tasks
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Managing external
influences
This module illustrates
the effects that the outside world can have upon the tasks and
resources within a project. You will learn about the
default options that govern how Microsoft Project works; how the
project's schedule is calculated, how projects are viewed and
edited etc. You will also learn how tasks can be
constrained, together with the far-reaching effect that this can
have upon the project's schedule. |
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Setting look and feel
defaults
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Setting calculation
defaults
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Local defaults and
global defaults
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Changing task
dependencies
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Applying task
constraints
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Scheduling the tasks
directly
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Finding tasks with
constraints
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Project-wide
constraints
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Viewing, analyzing and
reporting
This module looks at how
data within Microsoft Project can be viewed and effectively
managed. You will learn how to create and manage
customized information in the form of custom fields, custom
views, custom tables, custom filters and custom groups.
You will also learn how all these customized components can be
shared between projects, thus promoting standardization.
As Microsoft Project can provide a wealth of online information,
you will also learn how this information can be published and
viewed within other PC applications. |
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Using global filters
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Creative use of
AutoFilter
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Creating and applying
custom fields
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Intelligently using
sort criteria
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Managing views and
tables
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Configuring the
network diagram
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Using the calendar
view
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Using usage views
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Configuring usage
views
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Using resource graphs
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Using task-based
reports
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Resource and crosstab
reports
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Sharing and
publishing project information
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Managing project
components
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Optimizing people and
plans
This module explores the
various options available within Microsoft Project to optimize
the relationship between a project's tasks and the resources
that will perform the work upon the tasks. You will learn
how to determine which resources have conflicts, when the
conflicts happen, and (most importantly) the reason for the
conflicts. You will learn how to compare the project's
schedule before and after the conflict is resolved. You
will also learn about the various options available to control
how Microsoft Project performs the leveling process, together
with ways to evaluate the benefits and the impact that the
leveling has provided. To help you interactively optimize
resource allocations you will also learn various ways to edit
individual assignments. Finally, you will learn about the
Resource Substitution Wizard and the impact it can have on
resource assignments within projects all across the enterprise.
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Dealing with resource
conflicts
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How to find resource
conflicts
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General leveling
parameters
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Detailed leveling
parameters
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Reviewing the effects
of leveling
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Manual assignment
replacements
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Detailed assignment
editing
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Using the resource
substitution wizard
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Resource substitution
and resource leveling
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Collaborating
information and progressing the plan
This module takes the
project from the planning stage into actually performing the
work upon the tasks and the achievement of the overall project
objectives. You will learn how to create baselines to
provide comparisons of what should have been achieved with what
has and will be achieved. You will learn how to establish
past / future boundaries and how these boundaries can best be
applied. To inform your team members and project
stakeholders about the project's tasks and assignments, you will
publish the plan. Then, assuming the role of a team
member, you will review a personal Gantt chart and enter in
progress within a personal timesheet. You will also see
how work can be delegated to other resources and how you can
communicate risks, issues and general documents across the
enterprise. When progress information has been updated,
you will learn how to accept this information back into the plan
and review the impact that it has had. You will also learn
how to update tasks with simple time-based progress in terms of
completions and actual / remaining time. As work doesn't
always proceed according to plan, you will also learn how to
reschedule uncompleted work into the future, together with the
implications that this can bring. |
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Creating baselines
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Displaying progress
information
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Setting update
boundaries
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Publishing project
information and tasks to knowledge workers and stakeholders
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Using Personal Gantt
charts
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Delegating work
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Updating personal
timesheets
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Working with status
reports
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Managing project
documents
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Working with risks
and issues
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Sending update
information
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Receiving and
accepting update information
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Reviewing the updated
assignments
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Updating tasks with
time-based progress
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Rescheduling
remaining work
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Replanning the future
This module looks at the
effect of updates to a project and the variances that they can
create. As variances can have a dramatic effect upon the
schedule of a project's tasks and its resources, you will learn
how to find and evaluate where these variances are and what has
caused them. You will also learn how to find where
scheduling conflicts exist and determine their cause and also
their magnitude. You will learn how to perform an earned
value assessment against a project to get an early warning of
cost or schedule overruns. Once you have analyzed the
effects of the progress, you will then apply methods, skills and
abilities learned throughout this training course to amend the
schedule and course of the project. You will perform
various what-if analyses against tasks, resources and
assignments to return the project to meeting its objectives.
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Looking for schedule
variances
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Filtering and
grouping by schedule status
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Evaluating work and
cost variances
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Earned value analysis
overview
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Applying earned value
analysis
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Replanning tasks to
get back on track
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Replanning people's
work to get back on track
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Analyzing
enterprise-wide information
This final module looks
at project information across the entire enterprise. Using
the Project Center, you will learn how to assess project
performance and identify problems and successes, changes and
trends. You will also learn how to identify overloads and
bottlenecks for particular individuals within the Resource
Center, together with skill assessments and capacity planning.
Using the Portfolio Analyzer, you will learn how to review and
assess project performance across many projects and multiple
disciplines. Finally, using the Portfolio Modeller, you
will make executive-level assessments of project and resource
performance across the entire enterprise. |
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Reviewing the
schedule progress of projects in the Project Center
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Project performance
reviews
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Drilling down into
project detail
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Reviewing workload
and availability by individual and skill within the Resource
Center
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Capacity planning and
skill requirements capture Using and creating portfolio
analyzer views
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Reviewing OLAP cube
settings
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Reviewing and
creating portfolio models
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Portfolio models and
version control
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